A. The word is Cajole [kuh-johl] (tim)

B. I cajoled my friends to drive me to Starbucks by telling them I'd buy them coffee. (Chel-C)

C.
–verb (used with object), verb (used without object), -joled, -jol·ing.
to persuade by flattery or promises; wheedle; coax.
Source: www.dictionary.com
-Nick T.

D.
external image cajole.jpg
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.magidson.com/Goodrich/cajole.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.magidson.com/Goodrich/cajole.html&h=650&w=650&sz=44&hl=en&start=1&tbnid=NLP8iD9it0RDHM:&tbnh=137&tbnw=137&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcajole%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D
-Brendan

E.
Synonyms:
argue into, banter, beguile, brownnose*, build up, butter, butter up*, con, crowd, deceive, decoy, delude, dupe, entice, entrap, get around, induce, influence, inveigle, jolly, lure, maneuver, massage, mislead, oil*, push, seduce, soften, stroke, sweet-talk*, sweeten up*, tantalize, tempt, urge, wheedle, work on, work over*
Antonyms:
belittle, bully, criticize, force, insult
(thesaurus.com) (Nichole)

F. So one time I cajoled Chel-c to help me with this english paragraph by telling her i would help her with her history paper. I used persuasion to get what I needed and in return she got the help she needed. -ashleyc

G. The word cajole reminds me of the movie "What About Bob". In the beginning of the movie Bob Wiley's first physciatrist trie to convince Dr. Marvin to take this insane patient off his hands by telling him that he couldn't think of a smater more capable man for the job and told him that he bought lots of copie of Dr. Marvin's new book saying how excellent it was.
Anna B

H. "Cajole Your Brain to Learn to the Left"
- I found this sentence in an article online. The word "Cajole" is used as a verb meaning to persuade, or coax, your mind to learn one to be a certain way. I found it at this website. http://www.jcrows.com/leftsideofbrain.html
- Amber Z.